Abstract
The emergence of and reaction to policy scandals has been usefully studied through comparative case studies.
Far less attention has been devoted, however, to the study of such scandals in long-term historical context.
With the aim of illuminating longer-term social processes which shape the likelihood that (health)care scandals emerge, we delineate three areas where such changes are visible:
- changing formats of social relations and emotions within and around care provision, and thereby understandings of and demands for compassionate care;
- heightened organisational and political sensitivity to failings; and
- changes in media reporting on healthcare failings, as well as in policy-makers’ responsiveness to and manipulation of media.
In the final section we explore the interconnection of the three processes and how longer-term approaches open up new vistas for policy analysis.
Full text (PDF 19pp)
Labels:
Mid_Staffordshire, health_scandals, NHS_England, long-term_policy,
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